Harding v. Taylor

1954 OK 192, 272 P.2d 443, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 584
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 15, 1954
Docket36098
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1954 OK 192 (Harding v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harding v. Taylor, 1954 OK 192, 272 P.2d 443, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 584 (Okla. 1954).

Opinion

CORN, Justice.

Proper disposition of the question presented by this appeal requires recitation of the factual background of earlier litigation which provided the basis for the present action.

In 1921 George Mulligan and wife conveyed a parcel of land (16.45 acres) in SE4, Sec. 31, Twp. 12N, R.3 W.I.M., to (J. A. Taylor by warranty deed, describing the land by metes and bounds. In 1926 the grantors platted and dedicated to public use other land adjoining Taylor on the west. The recorded plat showed the east line of the plat to be 908.4 feet west of the east line of this section.

In 1943 Taylor sued numerous parties, including the present defendant, alleging ownership and possession of the property for more than 15 years and that defendants were claiming some interest in the property thus clouding his title; that they interfered with his possession thereof by attempting to fence off a portion (31 feet) of the land which he claimed both by deed and prescription, and asked judgment quieting his title and enjoining defendants from interfering with his possession of the land.

During the trial of that case the court appointed a qualified surveyor who, after a *444 survey of the property, reported his findings to the court. Based upon such survey the tiial court found Taylor’s (plaintiff’s) west boundary line was 908.4 feet west of the east section line and that the east boundary line of the plat under which defendants claimed adjoined plaintiff’s west line. Upon this finding the court decreed that certain defendants, including the present defendants; were not encroaching upon Taylor’s land, found the issues generally in their favor and denied plaintiff’s claim for injunctive relief.

In' April 1953, the present plaintiffs, administrators of A. Taylor (plaintiff in the original action), filed this action alleging the boundary line was 908.4 feet from the east section line as adjudicated in the first action; notwithstanding such judgment which was binding upon defendant, she had destroyed plaintiff's fence- and had commenced erection of her own fence some 6 feet over on plaintiff’s property. They sought a temporary injunction and asked that upon final hearing she be enjoined permanently from trespassing upon or erecting a fence upon their property.

Defendant answered alleging her ownership of the property (Lot 16, Block 1, West Lawn Garden Addition) under the recorded plat, the east boundary line of which had been established in the prior lawsuit wherein she was a party .defendant; that the judgment entered in the original action found all the issues generally in defendants’ favor and such judgment became final and was not appealed from.

The parties entered into a stipulation, the substance of which is stated below and agreed same could be received in evidence.

1. The parties, the land and the issues involved are the same as in the original action, and that judgment was res judicata as to matters therein described.
2. The west line of plaintiffs’ property and the east line of defendant’s property are 908.4 feet west of the east section line of the section (sec. 31, Twp. 12, R.3).
3. The county surveyor had determined the 908.4 foot boundary line is approximately 6(4 feet west of a line of telephone poles crossing this land from north to south; fence defendant seeks, to erect is approximately 6(4 feet east of line of survey markers fixing the 908.4 boundary line.
4. At and since time of original suit there was a tree approximately on the line where defendant now seeks to ,establish a fence and defendant at that time had a fence .attached to the tree;, after that judgment plaintiff (in original suit) tore the fence down; over the-following years defendant would erect a fence and Taylor would destroy same- and erect a fence along line of surveyor’s markers, which fence defendant tore down; when defendant started the present fence she destroyed the fence erected along surveyor’s markers some 6½ feet west of the fence' she sought to build.

' At the trial both parties relied upon and1 introduced in evidence records and proceedings in the original suit. After both-sides had rested the trial court announced that he would like to hear the evidence of the surveyor and, over defendant’s objections, plaintiffs were permitted to reopen the case for the purpose of offering such, testimony.

The witness (R. W. Thomas) testified he-made the survey at the direction of the judge who tried the original case. Previously two other surveyors had worked the area in an effort to establish the true line but there was some discrepancy in their work so the court directed the witness to-■make a survey and establish location of the-908.4 foot boundary line. This he did and,, as requested, set iron stakes or monuments,, on the true boundary which stakes were approximately 6½ feet east of the line of telephone poles and thus marked the 908.4 foot boundary line from the east section line as-called for. At the time of his survey there was a tree near the line and defendant had a fence attached to such tree which was approximately upon the line where defendant sought to build the fence involved in this case. No other line was taken into consideration from any tree or other point, and the only thing considered was in reference *445 to the east section line, in an effort to ascertain where the boundary line would be according to the Taylor deed and the West Lawn Garden plat. Based upon the survey the trial court in the first case denied Taylor relief and decreed the true boundary was that fixed by the survey, rather than the line of telephone poles some 6½ feet to the west, up to which Taylor had been cultivating and which portion he also had claimed by prescription.

Thereafter it was brought out by cross-examination and redirect examination that the history of the land in this area had been rather stormy; a portion thereof first was conveyed by metes and bounds under an unrecorded plat, and later an effort was made to fit the recorded plat to the unrecorded portion. The manner in which this land was platted made it impossible for the lots to be of the depth called for in the plat when the area was surveyed from the east section line and the 908.4 foot boundary laid off as called for under the plat; to meet the specifications in the plat would require beginning at the center line and proceeding eastward until the lots and streets of the plat extended over onto the Taylor land.

The court then rendered judgment quoting the pertinent portion as follows:

“The 'Court finds in this case that the journal entry of judgment rendered by the court in case No. 107, 157 was based, upon a line established by survey made by R. W.

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Bluebook (online)
1954 OK 192, 272 P.2d 443, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 584, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harding-v-taylor-okla-1954.